Dunwoody Crier - September 28, 2023

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OPINION: PAST TENSE

Biggerstaff: U.S. Census records track changes in Dunwoody

Dunwoody UMC hosts mental health advocate

DUNWOODY, Ga. – Dunwoody United Methodist Church will host William Moyers Oct. 12 as a part of the “One Lamb Initiative” to address mental health.

The event, “An Evening with William Moyers,” will be held from 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in the church’s Sanctuary.

Moyers is the vice president of the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, an addiction treatment and advocacy organization. He will speak about his best-selling memoir, “Broken: My Story of Addiction and Redemption.”

Moyers’ best-selling memoir discusses his personal experience with addiction, the road to recovery and his personal journey of faith. He will share his story with the church community and how they can support recovery Thursday, Oct. 12.

The “One Lamb Initiative” was born in 2020 after members of Peachtree Road UMC noticed a need for support, connection and education for people struggling with mental health. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the group encouraged other faith organizations to open their own chapter.

For those interested in Moyers’ memoir, Dunwoody UMC will host a two-part, book study series on Oct. 3 and Oct. 17 from 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

For more information on the “One Lamb Initiative” and “An Evening with William Moyers,” visit https:// www.dunwoodyumc.org/onelamb/

Appen Media seeks input for city candidate questions

METRO ATLANTA — As election season approaches, Appen Media and the Crier and Herald newspapers plan to offer readers a guide for getting to know the candidates.

In order to offer comprehensive and useful information, the news organization is seeking community input.

What topics do you care most about in local government? What would be a deciding factor for you when choosing an elected official? Is there a particular project you’d like them to take on? Perhaps an ongoing initiative you’d like to see the city execute differently? Help us understand your perspective and we can

More Information

Advanced voting begins October 16. The deadline to register is October 10.

all advance toward a more informed community.

The goal is to have these questions

answered as the window for early voting. That way you can go to the polls feeling more educated about your pick for city representation.

Those with questions or suggestions for the newsroom should send them to newsroom@appenmedia.com or fill out the form at appenmedia. com/vote.

September 28, 2023 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | Serving the community since 1976
► PAGE 26
PROVIDED

NEWS TIPS

Roswell Police announces human trafficking busts

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Alpharetta, GA 30009

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Roswell, Ga. — Roswell police announced three arrests in an investigation into a human trafficking network operating in massage parlors throughout Metro Atlanta.

More than 70 officers and investigators, across Fulton County, served search and arrest warrants at 10 locations in Roswell, Johns Creek, Sandy Springs and Atlanta Sept. 20.

The City of Roswell bolstered efforts to combat human trafficking in May 2022 when the City Council strengthened regulation and enforcement measures for massage parlors and spas. Roswell Police Special Investigations Section then began undercover operations at local spas, uncovering connections between several spas engaging in criminal activity.

As the investigation progressed, officers discovered “an extensive human trafficking and prostitution network spanning at least six spa locations thus far,” Roswell Police Chief James Conroy said.

Speaking at a Sept. 22 press conference at Roswell City Hall, Mayor Kurt Wilson thanked Chief Conroy and city staff for more than a year’s work on the investigation.

“This operation was highly coordinated with our sister cities, Fulton County, and was led by the City of Roswell Police Department to bite the head off the snake, hitting 10 places simultaneously,” Mayor Wilson said.

Search warrants were executed at:

• Alpha Massage, 11235 Alpharetta Hwy, Ste. 133, Roswell

• Ease Massage, 1085 Holcomb Bridge Road, Ste. 140, Roswell

• Enjoy Massage, 1580 Holcomb Bridge Road, Ste. 21A, Roswell

• Iris Massage, 880 Holcomb Bridge Road, Ste. B-105, Roswell

• Barefoot Massage, 5920 Roswell Road, Ste. A-113, Sandy Springs

• Rose Massage, 2409 Piedmont Road NE, Ste. B, Atlanta

Chief Conroy said the spas have been temporarily shut down, and Roswell is pursuing the means to keep those in its city permanently closed.

So far, three people have been arrested and charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and labor trafficking: Wei Cheng Hui, 56, of Johns Creek; Yan Lin, 41, of Johns Creek; and Lin Chen, 36, of Rome. All three were called “top targets” of the investigation by Chief Conroy.

“This operation was one of the largest of its kind in the region,” Conroy said. “This marks a significant milestone in our ongoing effort to combat human trafficking at the organizational level.”

The 20 victims of human trafficking associated with the spas “were immediately linked with vital support and resources for their stability and care,” Roswell Police said.

Chief Conroy did not provide any information about the victims except that they were all adult females. Further investigation and prosecution will shed light on how these 20 women were trafficked to Fulton County.

Additional arrests are expected as the investigation continues, Conroy said.

The city’s partnership with the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office and “Out of Darkness” –an antitrafficking organization – ensures that victims are properly taken care of, officials said.

Alpharetta and Sandy Springs Police departments provided officers to assist in the Sept. 20 busts.

“We cannot do this alone, our officers are great at investigating and arresting people,” Roswell’s Conroy said. “When we have to take care of victims, we have to rely on the District Attorney’s Office and the private organizations to get resources to victims in this case.”

Mayor Wilson attributed the success

of the investigation to the hard work of the City Council and the effort to fully fund and staff the city’s police department.

“Not only must we protect the victims of human trafficking, but we must eliminate human trafficking in our community altogether,” Mayor Wilson said.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis echoed Mayor Wilson’s praise of Chief Conroy’s work as “one of the best police chiefs in the state of Georgia.”

“So many cities and so many mayors would like to put their heads in the sand and not acknowledge that this is a problem,” Willis said at the press conference. “It takes courage to do what Mayor Wilson and this City Council has done.”

The presence of officials from Roswell, Fulton County and the Governor’s Office marked a celebration of successful law enforcement partnerships, Willis said.

“We’re at the very beginning of a long road,” she said. “We have to make sure that we are always attacking it [human trafficking] and letting them know that this is not the city, or the place, or the county for this to occur.”

Officials emphasized that human trafficking activities often occur in plain sight, and that the entire community is required to combat it.

“We can longer have willful blindness to this heinous crime,” said Deputy District Attorney Earnelle Winfrey. “They are real people, real women, caught in these massage parlors.”

Winfrey implored residents to say something, if they see something.

“See something, say something is so true,” Mayor Wilson echoed. “Because everyday people go by businesses, and they know something’s not right.”

2 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody PUBLIC SAFETY
Judged a newspaper a newspaper of General Excellence 2023 AAPPEN PRESSCLU B appenmedia.com/join
HAYDEN SUMLIN/APPEN MEDIA Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis commends Roswell officials Sept. 22 at City Hall for their effort to combat human trafficking. CHEN HUANG LIN

CRIER NOTES

Dunwoody fencers win national honors

The coaches and fencers of Dunwoody Fencing Club received recognition as a 2023-2024 USA Fencing Club of Excellence. Five clubs were selected nationwide for the honor. It’s the second year the club has won the award.

The USA Fencing Club of Excellence Program honors work done at the grassroots level to grow and sustain fencing.

Tell the Crier

The Crier is first and foremost a community newspaper. Send your notes, awards and photos to newsroom@ appenmedia.com.

AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 3 COMMUNITY BLUE STONE ARTS & MUSIC FESTIVAL SEPTEMBER 29 & 30 • CITY SPRINGS • BLUESTONEFEST.COM FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 29 THE ROBERT RANDOLPH BAND CERTAINLY SO • TROUBADOUR PROJECT & many more SOUL ASYLUM RUSTON KELLY • UPTOWN FUNK & many more SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 30 Stroll along Blue Stone Road Live music on multiple stages • Artist market • Unique performances • Food vendors
SPECIAL TO APPEN MEDIA
From left, coach James Wallace, coach Jacob Wachtel and head coach Kathy Vail lead the Dunwoody Fencing Club.
A Place for ALL Jews Ashkenazi Orthodox Rabbi Yitzchok Werbin 5075 Roswell Rd 1 mile inside I-285 Sandy Springs www.KesherTorahAtlanta.org

Sandy

Name: EMCARE2U

Founder: Dr. Phindile Erika Chowa, MD

Description: EMCARE2U is a medical concierge company that helps relieve the challenges patients encounter when accessing medical care. We bring care to our clients, whether that is in their home, office or via telemedicine. We specialize in urgent care visits, post-operative care, post-partum care, and nutrition services. Our team has a combined experience of over 100 years.

Opened: July 2023

Phone: 800-265-6689

Address: Atlanta, GA

Website: www.emcare2u.com

Atlanta Fine Homes signs lease relocating operations to Avalon

ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty is moving to Avalon in fall 2024, according to the brokerage.

"This strategic decision reflects our commitment to providing the highest level of service and accessibility to our valued clients" according to David Boehmig, President and Co-Founder.

Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty reports a team of over 575 professionals equipped to guide clients through their real estate journey. Over the years, they served 4,400 clients and achieved $4.3 billion in home

5975

Alpharetta 5230

sales.

The new home at 8000 Avalon is a modern office building featuring premium surroundings and amenities. With over 77 retail experiences, more than 15 chef-driven restaurants, and a fullservice hotel and conference center just a quick stroll away, the agency expects to offer visitors a truly immersive and convenient experience.

The move symbolizes a commitment to staying at the forefront of the real estate industry, fostering growth, innovation, and personalized service for clients, according to the brokerage.

UGA alumni Hayden Sumlin joins Appen Media staff

ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Appen Media Group announced Sept. 18 that Hayden Sumlin will join its staff as a reporter. Sumlin will cover local governments and businesses in Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and Roswell. He will report to Carl Appen, director of content and development, and he will be based in Alpharetta.

“It’s always great when we can get someone skilled on board who grew up in the area,” Appen said in a statement. “Hayden is bringing the drive and familiarity we need to dig deeper with that local coverage.”

Sumlin graduated from the University of Georgia Franklin College of Arts

and Sciences in December 2022 with a major in philosophy. During his time at UGA, Sumlin took courses exploring analytical philosophy, continental philosophy and political science. After graduating, Sumlin held a newsroom internship with the Marietta Daily Journal.

“I am someone who is passionate about revitalizing American journalism,” Sumlin said. “Although I was not a Grady College student, I hope that my experience writing as an undergraduate and as an intern can translate well at Appen Media.”

To contact Sumlin with news tips or story ideas, email hayden@appenmedia.com.

4 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody NEWS
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Roswell Reads to showcase best-selling writer Krueger

ROSWELL, Ga. – Roswell Reads, in partnership with Roswell Cultural Arts and Bookmiser, has chosen as its 2023 author selection William Kent Krueger. The New York Times bestselling author of “This Tender Land” and two dozen other works will be in Roswell for a pair of events Sept. 29 and 30.

Krueger who has penned five stand-alone novels and 19 Cork O’Connor mysteries, will discuss his just-released title, “The River We Remember,” at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 29, at the Roswell Cultural Arts Center, 950 Forrest St., Roswell. Tickets are $20 and are available online at roswellcac.showare.com/WilliamKentKrueger, by calling 770-594-6232 or at the Roswell Cultural Arts Center. Additionally, the first 100 ticket holders who order the novel from Bookmiser, 770-509-5611, will receive reserved priority seating.

Krueger’s second local appearance will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 30, when he will present a master writing class in conversation with George Weinstein, executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club, at the Roswell Adult Recreation Center, 830 Grimes Bridge Road. Tickets are $13.50 and are available at roswellcac.showare. com/WritingWorkshopwithWilliam -

KentKrueger, by calling 770-5946232 or at the Roswell Cultural Arts Center.

“The River We Remember,” released Sept. 5, is a complex, spellbinding mystery and a masterful portrait of midcentury American life. An unflinching look at the wounds left by the wars we fight abroad and at home. It is a moving exploration of the ways in which we seek to heal and a testament to the enduring power of the stories we tell about home.

Since 2005, Roswell Reads has been promoting the value of reading, literacy and lifelong learning through the shared community-wide experience of reading and discussing a common book. Roswell Reads is a program of Friends of the Roswell Library. For more information, go to RoswellReads.com.

Harmel to discuss new book at Johns Creek Literary Fair

JOHNS CREEK, Ga. – The inaugural Johns Creek Literary Fair, presented by Emory Johns Creek Hospital and sponsored by the City of Johns Creek, will be Oct. 1 and feature keynote author Kristin Harmel. The New York Times, USA Today and No. 1 international bestselling author of more than a dozen novels, including “The Forest of Vanishing Stars” and “The Book of Lost Names,” will be discussing her latest release, “The Paris Daughter.”

Harmel, whose books have been translated into over 30 languages and are sold around the world, is the cofounder and co-host of the weekly web show and podcast, “Friends & Fiction.” She will be joined by a number of local, regional and nationally known writers appearing from noon-5 p.m. that Sunday at the Mark Burkhalter Amphitheater in

Newtown Park, 3150 Old Alabama Road, Johns Creek.

Rounding out the afternoon, intermissions will feature performances from Musik21 Conservatory, nearby children’s authors and activities will keep younger visitors entertained, and light hors d’oeuvres, wine and other beverages will be available for purchase. George Weinstein, executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club, will be the event’s master of ceremonies.

In addition to Sunday’s offerings, local bookstores will kick off the weekend’s literary endeavors with in-house author events Saturday, Sept. 30.

For more information, go to johnscreekga.gov/recreationandparks/special-events/literary-fair.

AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 5 NEWS dunwoodyga.gov | 4800 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody GA 30338 | 678.382.6700 16 October Highlights 10 5 21 3 12 13 14 Spirits for Spruill and AMPLIFY Mural Reveal Spruill Gallery | 4 - 7 p.m. Groovin’ on the Green featuring Departure: The Journey Tribute Band | 6 p.m. Dunwoody City Council Meeting City Hall | 6 p.m. Annual Scout Halloween Farm Festival Donaldson-Bannister Farm noon - 6 p.m. Truck or Treat and DPD’s See and Be Seen Brook Run Park | 5 - 8 p.m. Annual Ceramic Bowl Sale Spruill Center for the Arts Whiskey in the Woods Dunwoody Nature Center Dunwoody City Council Meeting City Hall | 6 p.m. 6 Food Truck Thursdays Every week thru Oct. 26 Brook Run Park 5 - 8 p.m. 27-29 28 14 30 Electronics Recycling Dunwoody’s Community Development department and Sustainability Committee St. Luke’s Presbyterian Church dunwoodyga.gov/electronics-recycling 1 - 4 p.m. Dunwoody Art Commission Meeting City Hall | 7:30 a.m. Zoning Board of Appeals Meeting City Hall | 6 p.m. Pizza with Police a Faith & Blue Event Brook Run Park Great Lawn Pavilion 4 - 7 p.m. Planning Commission Meeting City Hall | 6 p.m. Sustainability Committee Meeting City Hall | 8 a.m. Trivia in the Park Dunwoody Nature Center
Plant Sale Dunwoody Community Garden & Orchard Master Gardener Talk: Making Use of Fall(en) Leaves Dunwoody Community Garden & Orchard 1 TreaTTruckor Dunwoody Farmers Market Every Saturday | 9 a.m. - noon Brook Run Park 26
Fall
KRUEGER

PROPERTY TAX 1ST INSTALLMENT DEADLINE OCT. 2, 2023

DeKalb County property tax bills were mailed Aug 15

Customers paying at the Memorial Drive tax office will use the UGA Extension office entrance located at the front of the building Sept. 25–29, and Oct. 2 until 6 PM (extended hours).

Disabled customers may still use the Property Tax entrance off Northern Ave.

Know before you go:

First installment due Oct 2 If paying the full amount in one payment, it must be paid in full by Oct. 2. The second installment is due Nov. 15.

Bring your tax bill stub and a valid Georgia ID or Georgia driver’s license

Acceptable payment methods include a credit/debit card, check or money order; processing fees apply for credit/debit card payments

Parking is available near the UGA Extension Service lot facing Memorial Dr. Disabled customers may use the Property Tax entrance off Northern Ave Security screening is are required for service.

Failure to receive a bill does not relieve the responsibility of paying taxes due Property owners who have not received their bill may contact the tax office for assistance, or access a copy of their bill online at https://dekalbtax.org/property-information.

AVOID LONG LINES AND WAIT TIMES

Please consider these payment methods:

Online: dekalbtax.org/property-information. Credit/debit card payments are accepted; processing fees apply There is no service fee for paying by e-Check

Drop box: 24-hour drop box available at all three office locations. Payment must be placed in the box by the due date; cash is not accepted

Pay-by-phone: Call 770-336-7500, Monday–Friday, 8 AM–5 PM Payment does not apply to prior year, delinquent payments Credit/debit card payments are accepted; processing fees apply

Mail: Mailed payment must be postmarked by the U.S. Postal Service by the due date to avoid late fees; metered or kiosk postage dates are not accepted as proof of timely payment.

All payments made in the office or online may take 24-48 hours to appear on the website Due to volume, payments received by mail during payment season may take up to a week or longer to post once received DO NOT cancel payment Please contact the tax office for payment concerns to avoid late fees

DeKalbTax.org/property-tax

p: 404-298-4000 | e: proptax@dekalbcountyga.gov

@DeKalbTaxGA

Northern District announces August Eagle Scouts

The Northern Ridge Boy Scout District (Cities of Roswell, Alpharetta, John’s Creek, Milton) is proud to announce its newest Eagle Scouts, who completed their Eagle Board of Review on August 31,2023, at Alpharetta Presbyterian Church.

Rohan Srivatsa, of Troop 27, sponsored by the Johns Creek Christian Church, whose project was the design and construction of three picnic tables at Bell Road Park.

Nikhil Perera, of Troop 1717, sponsored by Cross of Life Lutheran Church, whose project was the design and construction of 15 custom food dollies, installing the dollies in a first-in first-out system to help better organize the pantry and then holding a food drive for the North Fulton County Charites and a food drive collecting 1,185 items.

Om Patel, of Troop 629, sponsored by Mt. Pisgah United Methodist Church, whose project was the design and construction of two custom-built electric wheelchairs for two children in need.

Jack Janco, of Troop 431, sponsored by Roswell United Methodist Church, whose project was the design and construction of four garden table planters on casters to allow for wheelchair or limited mobility participation in the Giving Garden at Roswell United Methodist Church.

Lakshan C Kumar, of Troop 27, sponsored by the Johns Creek Christian Church, whose project was the design and construction of two benches and the restoration of five existing benches and tables for the North American Shirdi Sai Temple of Atlanta.

Nikolia S. Hagen, of Troop 432, sponsored by Roswell United Methodist Church, whose project was the renovation of pathways by removal the old, crushed gravel material and installing a paver stone flush to the ground. Efforts also included installation of a drainage pipe with a square water intake for the Saints Raphael, Nicholas, and Irene Greek Orthodox Church.

Alpharetta announces Wire and Wood lineup

ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Wire and Wood organizers have named more than 30 performers for the 10th annual songwriters festival in downtown Alpharetta Oct. 13-14.

Friday acts include the Atlanta Songwriters Round with Eliot Bronson, Matthew Kahler and Connelly Crowe; Bee Taylor; Ben Bostick; Brother Mojo; Funk You; and Hughes Taylor.

Lauren Morrow, Marc Broussard, Mike Kinnebrew, Pasadena, Rissi Palmer, Sans Abri, Sasha Hurtado, Sophie Gault, Soulhound and The Madame Vega will also perform Friday.

Saturday performances include Abe Partridge, followed by the Ansley Stewart Trio, Bri Luv, Cat Ridgeway, Cody Marlowe and the Dead Flowers, Cicada Rhythm, Dusty Roads, Gibson Wilbanks, Joelton Mayfield, John Paul White, Liz Kate and Mildly Aggressive Folk. Performances on Saturday conclude with The Nashville Songwriters Round with Michael Logen, Emily Earle and Jeff

This article is an update to the previous lineup Appen Media ran in July.

Cohen; Nicolas Edward Williams; Rosey; SUSTO; The Future Babes; The Honky Collective; The New Respects and Walden. The festival will be preceded by a free kick-off concert on The Plaza at Avalon featuring Lilly Winwood and Joslyn and The Sweet Compression from 6-9 p.m. Oct. 12.

During the festival, Music Match will highlight local musicians at participating businesses downtown in partnership with Wire and Wood.

Roaring Social will host a ticketed Listening Room at 3 p.m. Oct. 14 featuring Angie Aparo. The Listening Room has limited capacity, and all proceeds from the $30 tickets will benefit the Music Match program.

Tickets for the Listening Room are available at wireandwoodalpharetta.com.

6 | September 28, 2023 NEWS
PROVIDED

Seniors take stage to showcase talent

FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — A talent show for seniors, ages “50 and better,” pushed the audience to re-conceptualize what an older demographic is capable of.

More than 200 people attended the Sept. 16 juried Senior Talent Show, a Georgia Recreation and Parks Association production hosted by Forsyth County Senior Services and the nonprofit Age Well Forsyth.

Ruthie Brew, director of Senior Services, welcomed the crowd.

“This is a celebration of the remarkable talents that flourish with age and experience,” Brew said.

The event, held at Sexton Hall, was interactive with emcee Tanita CookNelson encouraging the audience to move. There was dancing, clapping along to tunes and a lot of laughter throughout.

Awards were given in each of the show’s three categories – Comedy, Music and Dance. And, the performances were rich in cultural diversity, from traditional Asian instrumentation to Indian folk dancing.

A group named “Senior Moments”

were the Grand Champions of the talent show. For its dance performance “Old Folks,” three people entered the stage taking on the stereotypical behavior of seniors — slow moving, rigid, humorless.

But that soon changed when one woman, some 70 years old, ripped off her nightgown to reveal a sparkly cabaret outfit as other performers entered and danced with gusto. This same woman was in a two-person performance, the second-place winner for Music. For this act, she did a full split.

Local church Dunwoody UMC recently reached an impactful milestone with nonprofit Rise Against Hunger, packaging 4 million meals since 2010 for people facing hunger globally.

Ready to get your group involved in the movement to end world hunger? Reach out to our Atlanta team to plan your volunteer event today.

AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 7 NEWS
PHOTOS BY AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA A woman completes a full split in a performance of “Cabaret” at the Senior Talent Show at Sexton Hall Sept. 16. Hosted by Forsyth County Senior Services and Age Well Forsyth, the show is a Georgia Recreation and Parks Association production, open to participants across the state ages 50 and older. Talent show participants perform an Indian folk dance Sept. 16.
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DUNWOODY FOOD TRUCK THURSDAYS

What: Every Thursday through October, this event features several food trucks and live music.

When: Thursday, Sept. 28, 5-9 p.m.

Where: Brook Run Park, 4770 North Peachtree Road, Dunwoody

More info: facebook.com/ dunwoodyfoodtruckthursdays

RADIO ’80S

What: Bring your lawn blankets and chair to see Radio 80’s Band cover the greatest hits from the decade. Tents as well as outside food and alcoholic beverages are not allowed. Friendly dogs on a leash are welcome.

When: Friday, Sept. 29, 7-9 p.m.

Where: Lou Sobh Amphitheater at Cumming City Center, 423 Canton Road, Cumming

More info: cummingcitycenter.com

BLUE STONE ARTS & MUSIC FESTIVAL

What: In its debut, this free festival will have an artist market and live music of different genres on multiple stages. There will also be food and beverages, a Kids Zone and a Sports Zone with a video wall.

When: Friday & Saturday, Sept. 29-30, times vary

Where: City Springs, 1 Galambos Way, Sandy Springs

More info: sandyspringsga.gov

MILTON FARMERS MARKET

What: Every Saturday morning through October, more than a dozen vendors set up shop around Milton City Hall with fresh produce, fresh meat, sweets, coffee and tea, flowers, soaps, jewelry and more.

When: Saturday, Sept. 30, 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m.

Where: Milton City Hall plaza, 2006 Heritage Walk, Milton

More info: facebook.com/ miltongafarmersmarket

JOHNS CREEK LITERARY FAIR

What: The inaugural Johns Creek Literary Fair will feature more than 30 authors hailing from the southeast and around the country.

When: Sunday, Oct. 1, 12-5 p.m.

Where: Mark Burkhalter Amphitheater at Newtown Park, 3150 Old Alabama

MILTON FARMERS MARKET

What: Every Saturday morning through October, more than a dozen vendors set up shop around Milton City Hall with fresh produce, fresh meat, sweets, coffee and tea, flowers, soaps, jewelry and more.

When: Saturday, Sept. 30, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Where: Milton City Hall plaza, 2006 Heritage Walk, Milton More info: facebook.com/ miltongafarmersmarket

Road, Johns Creek

More info: johnscreekga.gov

‘THE MIRACULOUS JOURNEY OF EDWARD TULANE’

What: Based on Kate DiCamillo’s awardwinning novel, and adapted by Dwayne Hartford, this play takes the audience on an unexpected magical journey to discover the transformative powers of love, featuring a china rabbit named Edward Tulane.

When: Saturday, Oct. 7, 11 a.m.

Where: Roswell Cultural Arts Center, 950 Forrest Street, Roswell Cost: $12

More info: roswell365.com

4TH ANNUAL ROSWELL MOTORING FESTIVAL

What: Benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and free to the Public, this event will feature rare cars, boats, bikes and more with vendors both automotive and art themed. There will

FEATURE YOUR EVENT ONLINE AND IN PRINT!

It’s even easier now than ever to promote your event to hundreds of thousands of people, whether online, through our newsletters or in the Crier and Herald newspapers.

also be Coffee Barista, snow cones, a photo booth and face painting.

When: Saturday, Oct. 7, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

Where: Roswell City Hall, 38 Hill Street, Roswell

More info: atlmotoringfest.org

CRABAPPLE FEST

What: Milton’s annual festival transforms Crabapple Road into a bustling market featuring more than 100 antique and art vendors, fair rides and food.

When: Saturday, Oct. 7, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Where: Crabapple Road, Milton

More info: miltonga.gov

‘FIDDLER ON THE ROOF’

What: Winner of nine Tony Awards when it debuted in 1964, “Fiddler on the Roof” is set in the little village of Anatevka and centers on Tevye, a poor milkman, and his five daughters. With the help of a colorful and tight-knit Jewish community, Tevye tries to protect his daughters and instill them with

easy steps:

traditional values in the face of changing social mores and the growing antiSemitism of Czarist Russia.

When: Oct. 6-22, times vary

Where: Byers Theatre, 1 Galambos Way, Sandy Springs

Cost: $42 to $130

More info: cityspringstheatre.com

‘TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE’

What: Based on the book, this play is about Mitch, who catches Morrie’s appearance on a television show 16 years after graduation. He learns that his old professor is battling Lou Gehrig’s Disease. Mitch is reunited with Morrie, and what starts as a simple visit turns into a weekly pilgrimage and a last class in the meaning of life.

When: Until Oct. 15, times vary

Where: Stage Door Theatre, 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody Cost: Adults are $28; students are $20; kids are $15

More info: stagedoortheatrega.org

8 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody › Calendar
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SEPT. 28 OCT. 8

October author events celebrate local writers

Following a flurry of appearances by nationally acclaimed authors, October’s book events in North Fulton and Forsyth counties focus mostly on local writers.

And few Atlanta-area groups have more of a hyperfocus on hometown talent than A Novel Idea. Since 2015, ANI has supported experienced or emerging local writers by providing professional settings, promotions and book sales for author events.

ANI’s October function – a sixperson presentation in Alpharetta – showcases the group’s newest undertaking: A launch initiative in collaboration with the Atlanta Writers Club. AWC members with new or recent releases are welcome to pitch them at one of ANI’s supper clubstyled celebrations, where Bookmiser has copies to purchase. Currently held at Alpharetta’s Brimstone Restaurant and Tavern, the evenings start early with attendees dining and end with authors signing.

Thanks to ANI, readers need never stray far from home to hear about new releases from nearby authors.

Details about ANI’s Oct. 24 event and other upcoming book activities include:

Saturday, Oct. 7, Chika Unigwe. The multi-award winner will discuss her April release, "The Middle Daughter.” Noon. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770232.9331. www.read-it-again.com

Saturday, Oct. 7, Carlie Walker. Mix and mingle book launch with the author of “The Takedown.” 2 p.m. Free. Bookmiser, 3822 Roswell Road, Marietta. 770-509-5611. bookmiser. net/book-events.html

Saturday, Oct. 7, Sarah Holley. The professional speaker will weigh in on her new release, "Jesus, the Ultimate Ladies’ Man." 2 p.m. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232.9331. www.read-itagain.com

Thursday, Oct. 12, Fr. Charles L. Blanchard. A conversation with the author of “The Seeds of Self-Destruction or Success.” 5 p.m. Free. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton. 770-797-5566. Poeandcompanybookstore.com

Saturday, Oct. 14, Rosalind and Maggie Bunn. Book launch for the

mother-daughter duo behind the “All Aboard” series, including “All Aboard, Tennessee!” State trivia and munchies. 11 a.m. Free. Bookmiser, 3822 Roswell Road, Marietta. 770-509-5611. bookmiser.net/bookevents.html

Saturday, Oct. 14, Piper Huguley. A meet and greet with the author of “By Her Own Design,” the story of Ann Lowe, a Black woman and granddaughter of slaves who designed and created Jackie Kennedy’s wedding dress. Noon. Free. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton. 770-7975566. Poeandcompanybookstore. com

Saturday, Oct. 14, MJ Pankey. Pankey will speak about her new title, "Epic of Helinthia.” 2 p.m. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232.9331. www.read-itagain.com

Saturday, Oct. 14, Acworth Book Festival. Presented by Acworth Cultural Arts, the 40-author event will feature many North Fulton and Forsyth writers. 10 a.m. Rosenwald School, 4410 Cherokee St., Acworth. acworthculturalarts.org

Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2024 Book Club Preview. An event highlighting Penguin Publishing’s upcom -

ing must-reads, hosted by Atlanta Authors Series and presented by Bookmiser. 2 p.m. Free. Roswell Cultural Arts Center, 950 Forrest St., Roswell. 770-509-5611. forl.net/ atlanta-authors

Saturday, Oct. 21, Laura Elizabeth. The author will sign “All is Now Lost: A Cozy Mystery Rooted in the South Carolina Lowcountry.” 2 p.m. Free. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton. 770-797-5566. Poeandcompanybookstore.com

Tuesday, Oct. 24, Six Authors’ Book Launch. Presented by A Novel Idea, Dr. Martha Boone, Mark Beaver, Anne Echols, Aishah Hight, Brynn Barineau and Aysha Treadwell will launch new titles during a fun night of dining and discussion. Bookmiser will have copies of their books available to purchase. 7 p.m. Free. Brimstone Restaurant & Tavern, 10595 Old Alabama Road, Alpharetta. 770509-5611. anovelidea.us

Wednesday, Oct. 25, Delilah Dawson. Days before Halloween, Dawson will discuss her new young adult novel, “Midnight at the Houdini,” about a magical hotel. 7 p.m. Free. Johns Creek Books, 6000 Medlock Bridge Pkwy Suite B500, Johns Creek. 770-696-9999. johnscreekbooks.com

Thursday, Oct. 26, Ken Holden. Bring your dog in costume for photos with the author of the “Maia’s Whimsical Adventures” books. 5 p.m. Free. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton. 770-797-5566. Poeandcompanybookstore.com.

Sunday, Oct. 29, How to Talk Like Shakespeare Workshop. Amanda Rountree, improv teacher, storyteller, writer and puppeteer, will lead a fun workshop with Shakespearethemed games and exercises to teach adults the difference between “thees” and “thous.” 5:30 p.m. $40. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232.9331. www.read-itagain.com

Coming up:

Tuesday, Nov. 7, “Operation Tailwind: A Marine’s Experience in the Vietnam War.” Celebrating Veterans Day, local author and former Marine Barry Pencek will recall serving as a helicopter pilot during the Vietnam War. Free. 6:30 p.m. Sharon Forks Library, 2820 Old Atlanta Road, Cumming. 770-781-9840. forsythpl. org/event/8834281

To submit an author event for the upcoming month, email Kathy Des Jardins Cioffi at kathydesjardins3@ gmail.com by the 15th.

AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 9 COMMUNITY
PROVIDED
Local authors George Weinstein and Kim Conrey launch books during a recent A Novel Idea event.

SPONSORED

Red Brick Cluster Home that

Captures the Best of Classic Design

A vintage cast iron “pup” beckons you to enter this elegant, red brick cluster home in a sought-after community that celebrates country club living and friendly neighbors. Abundant foundation plantings, window boxes, and an awning over the front door evoke additional images of Charleston’s historic colorful corridors.

This home is one of the beautiful homes featured in the 50th Annual Home Tour set for Wednesday, Oct. 4, from 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. and is hosted by the Dunwoody Woman’s Club. All profits of the home tour are used to implement the club’s charitable initiatives. Home tour tickets can be purchased several ways as outlined below at the end of this article.

Having greeted the pup, you’ll pass through double, glass-paned doors into a world of rich colors and collectibles, with a special nod to designers Tory Burch and Ralph Lauren. Soft lighting, a welcoming settee, cowhide rug, and deep Rockwood Brown paint over grass cloth walls focus attention on a late 19th century painted commode in the foyer. Peek into the navy and white striped powder room and you will know you are in for an eye-dazzling treat throughout this home.

In the manner of historic, single-family homes, rooms progress in linear fashion, front to rear, with the dining room first to your right. Architectural prints line the walls and blue and white drapes provide dining privacy when needed. A gilded chandelier, similar to those found in St. Regis Hotels, reflects candlelight in an ornate mirror above the buffet, elevating the dining experience.

Walls in the living room at the rear of the home are cast in Maison Blanche, providing the perfect backdrop for a mounted display of agate stones above creamy tufted seating and coffee table. A 19th century French Louis XV walnut

More Information

baroque armoire and bookcase brace a white brick fireplace where artist Steve Lyons’ painting, “Over the Moon,” rises boldly above the mantel.

Access to the draped intimate dining nook and kitchen is off the living room and by passage from the formal dining room. The kitchen features limestone countertops, a trench sink, and Jenn Air stainless steel appliances. Michelin-star chefs would be very happy here. From the dining nook you can exit to a secret, ivy-walled courtyard where you might enjoy an al fresco brunch or intimate soiree. But before entertaining those thoughts, ascend up the leopard-spotted, central stair carpeting to the second floor.

The owner’s suite features a coffered ceiling with pictures of New York and Chicago garment districts adorning one wall. A matte crimson quilt covers a burled wood bed, complementing the keystone design of the draperies. Rising phoenix lamps sit proudly atop the nightstands with Black Forest antlers mounted on walls.

This is a home that has reimagined the owner’s dreams and captured the best of classic design. Enjoy the vision.

This year’s home tour will include three outstanding private homes; two in Dunwoody and one in nearby Sandy Springs. Once again the club is partnering with Southern Comforts Consignments in Dunwoody. Included on the tour is “Fall Entertaining” – a decorator showcase with Marc Jones our in-house Consignor’s Designer. Seating is limited so pre-registration is encouraged by going to style.southerncomforts.com or by calling 770-901-5001

Be sure to check out the exciting raffle on the day of the tour for the chance to win one of three prizes each valued at least $500. Cash and credit cards accepted.

Home Tour tickets are available now and can be purchased as follows:

• Online at https://www.dunwoodywomansclub.com/buy-home-tour-tickets/

• Guests can go in person to purchase tickets at Southern Comforts at 2510 Mt. Vernon Rd., Dunwoody

• From any member of the Dunwoody Woman’s Club Tickets are $30 in advance and $35 on tour day. We look forward to seeing you at the home tour and appreciate your support of our charitable projects. Buy your tickets today!

For more information about the Dunwoody Woman’s Club go to www.dunwoodywomansclub.com

10 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com DUNWOODY HOME TOUR $30 (advance)
$35 (tour day) Tickets On Sale At: Southern Comforts at Mount Vernon Shopping Center, or from any DWC member. First Wednesday in October 9:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Annual GFWC Dun woody Woman’s Club Home Tour And Raffles 50th Annual WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 4th 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. 2023 Decorator Showcase and Raffle All
Service to our Community since 1971. Scan QR Code for Ticket Information
profits of the Home Tour help support the club’s charitable programs.

Embracing Hope

health during Suicide Awareness Month

Brought to

As Suicide Awareness Month ends, it’s crucial to recognize the hidden struggles faced by empty nesters. This phase, marked by children leaving home, can bring profound emotional challenges. Research shows that empty nesters face higher rates of depression, with studies indicating that up to 20% experience significant symptoms.

Understanding the signs of suicide in older adults is essential:

• Verbal clues: Expressing thoughts of burden and the desire to end life or stating clear intentions of suicide.

• Behavioral clues: Prior suicide attempts or preparations, mood changes indicative of depression, giving away possessions or making final arrangements, and shifts in coping mechanisms like religious interests or substance use. Some actions may indicate a sense of preparation.

• Situational clues: Major life changes, loss of significant relationships, serious illness, fear of becoming a burden, and financial insecurity are risk factors for suicide.

These signs should never be ignored. Early intervention and support are crucial to addressing these challenges. If you or someone you know is

empty nesters’ mental New Show, Same Ride.

struggling, call or text 988 (The Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) or reach out to Summit Counseling Center at www. summitcounseling.org for a confidential session. Remember, you’re not alone, and help is just a call away. Together, we can find hope and strength.

Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Crier 9/28/23 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com 42 Fan noise 44 Proprietors 45 Emulates Xanthippe 46 Cease-fire 48 Join forces 49 Hemp necktie 50 Check 51 Son of Leah 52 Nautical direction 53 Australian export 55 Blueprint 57 Bean counter, for short 58 Eyeball 59 Chang’s Siamese twin 1234 5678 9101112 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 Across 1 Super follower 5 Roasting rod 9 Blessing 13 Sound rebound 14 African howler 15 Advantage 16 Craft 17 Raspberry 19 Collector’s goal 20 Verb preceder 21 Fleeced 22 Patch up 24 Hockey score 26 Dragnet actor 27 Dismantle 31 Italy’s ___ di Como 32 Guff 33 Phi follower 34 Parking place 35 Thin plain-weave cotton or linen fabric 38 Subway alternative 39 Cain raiser 40 1962 Bond flick 41 Baby buggy 43 Charles Lindbergh, e.g. 46 Familia members 47 Dermal development 48 Scamp 50 Jargon 53 Heavy load 54 “Alley ___!” 56 Type of lens 59 Carbon compound 60 In the past 61 Chatter 62 Space suit insignia 63 Bakers’ wares 64 Au fait 65 Hidden valley Down 1 Porgy’s woman 2 Reddish yellow 3 Rafter’s lure 4 Chop off 5 Pancake topper 6 Working stiff 7 Roadhouse 8 Duty 9 Lo’s partner 10 Poetic tributes 11 Kind of arch 12 Egghead 14 Nuclear weapon 18 Scorch 20 Fat cat 23 ___ out 24 Bas-relief medium 25 Brewer’s kiln 27 Tarnish 28 Periodic 29 “Kapow!” 30 Pen point 31 Zero, on a court 32 Swagger 34 Untilled tract 36 Sixth Jewish month 37 Long stories
September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | 10
Sponsored Section
See solution page 30
you by - Summit Counseling Center
Understanding CADILLAC JACK MY SECOND ACT APPENMEDIA.COM/PODCASTS

Strong local news means a

The Best of North Atlanta is a sister event to the Best of Perimeter. BONA winners for 2023 have been announced and here are a few featured winners. See the full list at bestofnorthatlanta.com.

Nominations for the Best of Perimeter 2024 will open in December. You can see the winners from this year at bestofperimeter.com.

BEST ONCOLOGY

Piedmont Cancer Institute

755 Mt. Vernon Hwy., Ste. 320 Sandy Springs, GA 30328

404-350-8711

www.piedmontcancerinstitute.com

Winner

BEST AUDIOLOGIST

North Georgia Audiology & Hearing Aid Center

4045 Johns Creek Pkwy. Suwanee, GA 30024

770-814-1260

yourhearinglink.com

Winner

BEST DERMATOLOGIST

Premier Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta

3180 North Point Pkwy., Ste 420 Alpharetta, GA 30005 678-345-1899

premierdermatologyatlanta.com

Winner

BEST HAIR RESTORATION

Anderson Center for Hair

2710 Old Milton Pkwy., Ste. 170, Alpharetta, GA 30009

404-256-4247

atlantahairsurgeon.com

Winner

BEST MOBILITY STORE/SERVICES

Heavenly Wheels

6375 McGinnis Ferry Rd., #101 Johns Creek, GA 30005

678-847-0301

heavenlywheels.com

Winner

Mobility Plus Alpharetta

4020 Nine McFarland Dr. Alpharetta, GA 30004

470-545-1827

mobilityplus.com

1st runner-up

BEST OBGYN

Modern Obstetrics & Gynecology of North Atlanta

Multiple Locations

404-446-2496

reyesobgyn.com

Winner

BEST INTERIOR DESIGN SERVICES

Kat Nelson Designs

770-751-8168

katnelsondesigns.com

Winner

BEST FAMILY LAW ATTORNEY

Swilling Family Law Firm, LLC

11115 Houze Rd., Ste. 100 Roswell, GA 30076

678-562-6525

swillingfamilylaw.com

1st runner-up

12 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Sandy_Springs BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section
2023
Alpharetta • Forsyth County • Johns Creek • Milton • Roswell Presented by
strong
economy Read at appenmedia.com/business Become a member at appenmedia.com/join
local

Providing comprehensive cancer care since 1987

Brought

to you by - Piedmont Cancer Institute

Learning that you have cancer is traumatic. Feelings of anxiety, fear and stress may overwhelm you. So many questions. Cancer is a complex disease which needs a comprehensive approach to care. Not all cancers are the same therefore not all care is the same. Searching and finding the best team to treat YOUR cancer is key. At Piedmont Cancer Institute, you will find that individualized, comprehensive cancer care is what we do.

In 1987, Piedmont Cancer Institute began providing care for those diagnosed with cancer. Since that time, PCI has expanded its care to five cities in the Atlanta metro area. We have continued to operate as a private practice allowing our team to build meaningful patient relationships which means you get the individualized care you need. From the beginning, our number one goal has been to provide the best possible care in all aspects of treatment - Clinical, Mind, Body, and Spirit. The physicians treat all types of cancer and hematological diseases. Our physicians and advanced practitioners work closely with your entire treatment team of specialists, primary care physicians, family, and caregivers to address your individualized cancer treatment plan. We integrate leading-edge therapies, the latest clinical trials, and cancer wellness programs for the best care possible.

We also offer convenient telehealth appointments, treatment education appointments and social worker appointments - all easily scheduled through our website. If you need a partner in care, PCI is here. PiedmontCancerInstitute.com

BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 13
PiedmontCancerInstitute.com
2023

Thank you for voting us Best Audiologist!

Brought to you by – North Georgia Audiology (NGA)

Everyone wishes to live a happy, healthy life. If you were to look at your health as a chain, you would see a connected series of links. Your brain, heart, eyes, and other organs are links which must all work together to keep the body functioning. Each link plays a vital role in the chain and your overall health. What happens if one of the links, such as the ability to hear, fails to work properly? North Georgia Audiology is committed to be “your link to better hearing.”

North Georgia Audiology (NGA) is one of the nation’s leading private practices for hearing healthcare. Correcting a hearing impairment requires detailed knowledge of how ears respond to sound and familiarity with the latest hearing technologies. Patients appreciate the personal touch our Doctors of Audiology

provide. NGA believes it is crucial to establish a patient relationship based on professionalism and trust while focusing on their individual needs and lifestyle. Forget about what you know about hearing devices up to now; you’ll be amazed at how smart, how helpful, and how transforming better hearing can be.

In addition, NGA’s Concierge Upgrade Program is a game-changer. The program allows patients to pay a small monthly fee to update their devices to the latest technology every two to three years. With our doctors’ expertise and devotion in providing solutions to hearing loss, patients can regain their confidence and are not embarrassed by inappropriate responses in conversations. The value of a strong hearing link is immeasurable.

Thank you, North Atlanta, for choosing us as Best Audiologist! It is a great honor, and we truly appreciate our wonderful patients.

14 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section Thank You For Voting Us Best Audiologist 2023 North Georgia Audiology and Hearing Aid Centers are known for both award winning service and unique and competitive pricing options. Contact us today to schedule an appointment. We listen, so you can hear. www.yourhearinglink.com GAINESVILLE 726 S. Enota Dr. Ste. B Gainesville, GA 30501 678-971-4647 SUWANEE, GA 4045 Johns Creek Pkwy. Ste. B Suwanee, GA 30024 770-814-1260 WOODSTOCK, GA 280 Heritage Walk Ste. 300 Woodstock, GA 30188 770-726-8948
PROVIDED

Congratulations to Premier Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta for their 6th straight win for Best Dermatologist of North Atlanta!

to you by

In years past, I have sat down with Dr. Taylor to learn a bit more about him as a dermatologist and a Mohs surgeon. This year, with his office finishing construction, we gathered to discuss the changes Premier Dermatology has undergone and the gratitude he has for his patients.

Alyssa: Hey Dr. Taylor. Wow there’s a lot going on here. It looks the same but different. I heard you had a flood? What happened and what has happened since?

Dr. Taylor: Yes, we did! Well, it was Christmas Eve at 6:30pm. My family (including myself) were all in Christmas pajamas. I was picking up our traditional to go Chinese food when my wife called and said that the police had called to inform her that the motion sensors were going off in the practice. My wife and I jumped into the car, still in our Christmas pajamas and headed to the practice with police on the way. When we entered the parking lot, water was rushing out from the front doors of the bottom floor of our building. Two firemen met us at the front door and said “It’s bad.” As it turns out, all of the prepping for the cold snap that we did in our floor of the building did not prevent the sprinkler line from rupturing in the attic. The flood was extensive. Roughly 75% of our practice was damaged, leaving us to rip out and rebuild! It’s been a long, slow process, partially because so many houses and buildings experienced floods that there was a wait list for insurance claims and for every step of the demolition and reconstruction process. The Christmas Eve cold snap last year really hit us hard.

Alyssa: Well, it looks beautiful again. It must be such a relief to be back in an attractive and functional space. How has working during this time been?

Dr. Taylor: Honestly, it’s been fine. Not ideal but fine. My staff is amazing. Truly! They never complained. We kept everyone’s hours and we just made do with the one section of the practice that was still usable. Thank goodness my Mohs laboratory and five patient exam rooms were undamaged, so we were still able to take great care of patients. Also, my patients are truly the best! They were all so genuinely concerned for us and understanding of our situation. We live in an area where great care is abundant, and people have options in who they see for healthcare. I am so fortunate to treat kind patients who gave us grace during

the flood and its aftermath.

Alyssa: Do you have anything else you want to add?

Dr. Taylor: Just something that I want to reiterate. I would like to say thank you to all of my patients. I am so thankful that you have confidence in me, my physician assistant Kathryn and our whole clinical team to help you stay healthy. Please know that my staff and I appreciate your trust in us. I am deeply grateful for you. We are truly honored that we can care for you and appreciative for your patience during reconstruction. And to my staff, thank you for making our great care possible. I would not have this opportunity without all of you.

Alyssa: Thank you for your time, Dr. Taylor and congratulations again on winning Best Dermatologist and on having your practice back to fully usable again!

Dr. Taylor: Thank you, Alyssa.

At Premier Dermatology, Brent Taylor, MD, and his team offer transformative, personalized care using state-of-theart techniques. With expertise in Mohs surgery and in reconstruction after skin cancer removal, Dr. Taylor helps patients achieve cancer-free results while optimizing aesthetic outcomes.

What truly sets Dr. Taylor apart as a surgeon is his commitment to addressing a patient’s skin cancer in a holistic manner. He does not consider his job complete just because a skin cancer has been successfully treated. He prides himself on following through with patients. He employs multiple technologies such as lasers and microneedling to assure that scars and reconstructive results are optimized. He helps patients explore preventative methods ranging from blue light therapy to oral medications to avoid future cancers.

“Dr. Taylor doesn’t just help patients treat the skin cancer of the moment. He helps them avoid the skin cancers of tomorrow.”

Dr. Taylor’s practice is a full-service dermatology clinic. Full body skin exams are available with either a male or female provider. The clinic is proud to provide a wide array of treatments for medical and cosmetic sun damage, from blue light therapy to chemical peels and laser photofacials. Aesthetic treatments include Botox®, fillers, chemical peels, sclerotherapy, Fraxel and Excel V laser and more.

For exceptional care that goes beyond skin-deep, look no further than Premier Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta.

BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 15
16 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section Skin Cancer & Mohs Surgery • Medical Dermatology Honored to be Voted Again in 2023! Best Dermatologist and Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2017 Presented By Best Dermatologist Best Of North Atlanta 2017 Presented By WINNER Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2018 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2019 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2020 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2021 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2022 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist Best Of North Atlanta 2023 Presented By WINNER Best Dermatologist Best Vein Specialist

Insist on the BEST

Dr. Brent Taylor is a Board-Certified Dermatologist, a Fellowship-Trained Mohs Surgeon, and is certified by the Board of Venous and Lymphatic Medicine in the field of Vein Care.

He is an expert in skin cancer and melanoma treatment, endovenous laser ablation, minimally invasive vein procedures and cosmetics procedures such as Botox and injectables.

Kathryn is a certified physician assistant with over 18 years experience as a Dermatology PA. We are excited to welcome her, as she brings with her experience in general dermatology and cosmetic dermatology.

Her specialties include general dermatology such as acne, eczema, rashes, hair loss, full body skin exams, abnormal growths etc. Kathryn also specializes in cosmetic dermatology including lasers, injectables, micro-needling, PRP, facial peels, sclerotherapy for spider veins and at home skin care.

Accepting new patients. We accept Medicare.

Schedule your appointment with Premier Dermatology today.

BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 17 Dermatology • Vein Care • Cosmetic Services 3180 North Point Parkway, Suite 420 • Alpharetta, GA 30005 PremierDermatologyAtlanta.com • 678-345-1899
Dr. Brent Taylor Kathryn Fillpek, PA-C

Advancing the art and science of hair restoration

Brought to you by - The Anderson Center for Hair

The Anderson Center for Hair are cutting-edge facilities dedicated to addressing hair loss in both men and women, with two locations in metro Atlanta. Our team of experts at Anderson Center for Hair boasts an impressive, combined experience of over 170 years in the field of hair loss and hair transplant surgery. Since our inception in 2011, our mission has been to elevate hair restoration surgery to both an art and a science.

Founded by Dr. Ken Anderson, MD, FISHRS, our center has a rich history. Dr. Anderson is triple boardcertified and holds a board certificate in Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, Hair Restoration Surgery, and Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (ENT surgery). Dr. Anderson maintained a thriving practice in

Beverly Hills, California, before being recruited by Emory Healthcare in 2008 to serve as the Chief of Hair Restoration Surgery. During his tenure there from 2008 to 2011, Dr. Anderson played a pivotal role in educating Emory physicians about surgical and non-surgical hair loss treatments for both men and women.

In 2022, Anderson Center for Hair was selected by the Emory University School of Medicine Department of Dermatology as the hair restoration surgery training site for its physicians.

Dr. Anderson is joined by Dr. Daniel Lee, MD, FACS, and Dr. Jeremy Wetzel, MD, both graduates of the American Academy of Hair Restoration Surgery, and each dedicated their entire careers in the subspecialty of Hair Restoration Surgery. Our commitment to our patients goes beyond surgical procedures. We are dedicated to ensuring that

our patients have a positive and comfortable experience while achieving the most natural results possible. As board-certified surgeons with formal training in hair transplantation, we are uniquely well-equipped to offer patients the most advanced treatments available. Our focus is on achieving undetectable results, excellent density in the transplanted area, and creating natural hairlines.

In addition to surgical options, we specialize in non-surgical hair loss treatments, which complement our surgical procedures. We provide comprehensive counseling on regenerative medicine, utilizing cutting-edge biotech strategies such as exosomes and platelet-rich plasma to promote hair regrowth and prevent future hair loss in patients with maleand female-pattern hair loss.

Patients from across the United States and around the world choose

Anderson Center for Hair for their hair loss care. We have proudly treated patients from 49 states and 53 different countries since our founding, and over 5% of our patients are themselves practicing physicians and surgeons. Recognized as one of the top 25 hair transplant centers in the world by a prominent hair transplant adviser in the UK since 2019, we have earned a reputation for excellence. Our dedication to ethical and expert care is reflected in our 700+ 5-star reviews from satisfied patients over the past 12 years.

At Anderson Center for Hair, patients can trust that they will receive the highest level of care and have access to the latest cutting-edge hair loss treatments. Our experienced team of experts is committed to helping every patient regain their confidence and achieve their hair restoration goals.

18 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section
BEFORE AFTER
BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 19

Patient-Centered, State-of-the-Art Women’s Healthcare available in Alpharetta, Johns Creek and Cumming

Brought to you by - Modern OBGYN of North Atlanta

With no time to be sick, in pain or have surgery, the providers of Modern OBGYN know that educating women with different options for surgery is important. Dr. John Reyes, Dr. Ingrid Reyes, Dr. Natu Mmbaga, Dr. Annie Kim, Dr. Zin Alonso, Dr. Nada Megally, Dr. Miranda Long, Dr. Natalie Clericuzio and Dr. Tina Lu understand that one way of helping women in this busy world is through minimally invasive surgical options via robotic surgery and in-office surgical procedures.

“There are so many great options for women,” Dr. John Reyes said. “It’s our

job to get that information to them and make them aware they don’t need large incisions, long hospital stays, or painful recovery times.”

Minimally invasive robotic surgery allows the physicians at Modern OBGYN to operate through just a few small incisions. Featuring a high-definition vision system and tiny wristed instruments that bend and rotate far greater than the human wrist, da Vinci enables them to operate with enhanced vision, precision and control.

As the first surgeons to perform da Vinci robotic surgeries at Emory Johns Creek Hospital, husband and wife team Dr. Ingrid and Dr. John Reyes know some common issues that can be ad-

dressed with robotic surgery are hysterectomies, ovarian cysts, pelvic pain and heavy bleeding. Striving to do their best for the women in the community, Dr. John said, “It’s a blessing to be able to do minimally invasive and robotic surgeries on patients suffering from longstanding issues such as infertility from endometriosis, fibroids, or pelvic adhesive disease.”

Established in 2010, Modern OBGYN has four convenient office locations in Johns Creek, Alpharetta at Avalon, and the newest office located on the Northside Forsyth campus in Cumming.

Along with compassionate care for patients and their needed surgeries, Modern OBGYN strives to give expect-

ing mothers the support they need by making sure that the mothers personally know their provider. Modern OBGYN has a highly experienced team of Certified Nurse Midwives who work alongside each physician to provide well-rounded, patient-centered and personal obstetrical care. You’ll always know us, and we’ll always know you,” Dr. John said. “No surprises when it comes time to deliver!”

Dr. John says the best part about building provider-patient relationships is, “We can help them become pregnant, and come full-circle to care for them during their pregnancy and delivery. It’s the full spectrum of caring for what’s so important to a woman’s life—her health and her family.”

20 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section
PEXELS
BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 21

Creating Stunning, Yet Functional Homes

Brought to you by –Kat Nelson Designs Inc.

North Atlantabased interior designer Kat Nelson believes every space should reflect the spirit of it’s inhabitants. Nelson brings visions of beauty, comfort, and functionality into homes across the city and beyond, earning her a reputation as an industry visionary.

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For the last two decades, Kat has been rising as one of Atlanta’s top designers. Her collaborative approach, combined with philosophy on design, allows her to step into nearly any space and create a look and style that completely reflects her clients’ lifestyles. And while it might sound counterintuitive, Kat says she works extra hard to make sure her spaces never look like a designer decorated them. “Beautiful design is collected, not fixed”, she says.

From performance fabrics that invite a “put your feet up” aesthetic, to one-ofa-kind touches that add a head-turning wow factor to every space, Kat has brought a new depth and dimension to the idea of functional beauty. “I know that functional is a huge buzzword in the design community right now, but if a space isn’t beautiful and comfortable, then you can’t enjoy living in it”, she says. “Anyone can create a pretty room. But we want you to experience a level of design that empowers you to live better lives. We want you to walk in and feel HOME”

As a child, part of a military family we lived around and traveled the world. I have seen firsthand many of the beautiful places this world has to offer

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Kat Nelson Designs has over 17 years of experience as a full-service design firm, based in Atlanta Georgia. Our projects exist from West to East coast with many repeat clients.

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22 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section
“The best part of my work is when clients tell me they don’t want to leave their home”, says Kat Nelson
BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 23
projects include new construction, major renovations and interior design. Establishing a professional team of resources and relationships with contractors and vendors always ensures the best results. Kat’s strength is her ability to interpret her client’s vision and discern their needs to create beautiful homes with approachable and liveable interiors.” – Kat 770.751.8168 kat@katnelsondesigns.com katnelsondesigns.com Let’s be social: Best Of North Atlanta 2017 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2018 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2019 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2020 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2021 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2022 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2023 Presented By WINNER
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24 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody BEST OF NORTH ATLANTA 2023 • Sponsored Section
Melody Swilling, Esq. Protecting the unique needs of North Fulton families. Swilling Family Law Firm, LLC delivers the practical guidance to help families achieve needed results. 11175 Cicero Drive, Ste. 172, Alpharetta, GA 30022 678-562-6525 • SwillingFamilyLaw.com 2021 2023 2022
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U.S. Census records track changes in Dunwoody

is operating machinery which makes cement blocks. The Mannings continued to farm and were still farming well past the 1950s, as those who stopped at their produce stand can recall.

DuBose bought the farm from Dr. Nay Strickland, who is also listed on the 1920 census on Roswell Road. He was one of the few local doctors for residents of Dunwoody.

VALERIE BIGGERSTAFF

Comparing census records through the decades gives insight into the lives of the people of a community and the changes that take place in that community. Census records for the area which includes Dunwoody are listed under the district name Shallow Ford. The name Shallow Ford was given because former Native American trails and later roads through Dunwoody led to the shallow ford of the Chattahoochee River, where at one time the river could be crossed on foot.

Through the 1920s and 1930s, Dunwoody was primarily a farming community. Homes listed on Roswell Road (now Roberts Drive) in 1920 include several farms. The Burnham, Grant, Beal, Cheek, Manning, Holbrook and Swancy homes on this road all list the head of the household’s occupation as farmer.

In 1940, William J. Swancy’s work

William J. Coker on Roswell Road is listed as a section hand foreman for the railroad in 1920. Coker and wife Eliza have a boarder in their home, Pauline Anderson, who teaches in a nearby school. The Roswell Railroad that ran from Chamblee, through Dunwoody and on to Roswell came to an end in 1921. William Coker had to find different work and the 1930 census shows he is a farmer.

Jubal Cox appears on the 1920 census managing a farm on Roswell Road. The farm was known as Ellaslea, located in the triangle of what is now Chamblee Dunwoody Road and Roberts Drive. The farm Cox managed was owned by Edwin DuBose, one of the owners of the ChamberlinJohnson-DuBose Dry Goods stores in Atlanta. DuBose’ name is not listed on the census, because the farm was a second home for his family.

Over on Peeler Road, which the 1940 census enumerator refers to as a road with a new name, Clarence Peeler is a foreman for the SALRR railroad, while his wife Elizabeth is a secretary for a trade association.

Robert F. and Eula Adams on Adams Road are shown in both the 1930 and 1940 census operating a farm. Two other neighboring families are named Adams. By 1940, Howard Adams and Robert L. Adams are doing road construction for the Work Progress Administration.

The 1940 census records for Donaldson Drive, today’s Vermack Road, shows the family of Will and Nellie Donaldson along with their children Fletcher and Fred. Will Donaldson works as a laborer for a nursery company.

On the same road is Rufus Childers, a streetcar motorman for the Georgia Power Company. Wil -

liam Childers is a home construction carpenter.

By 1950, the General Motors plant was open, and some residents of Dunwoody found jobs there. Twentysix-year-old Perry Eidson and his 55-year-old father, Lonnie Eidson, both live on Chamblee Dunwoody Road in 1950 and both work for an auto manufacturer.

Among the others working on at the automobile assembly plant and living in Dunwoody in 1950 are Joseph Ford, Joe Copeland, Claude Warbington and Sam Roylston.

There are still quite a few farmers during this transitional time when major growth was on the horizon.

Thank you to Chryse Wayman for her extensive ancestry.com research into the early families of Dunwoody for Dunwoody Preservation Trust.

Award-winning author Valerie Biggerstaff is a longtime columnist for Appen Media and the Dunwoody Crier. She lives in Atlanta. You can email Valerie at pasttensega@gmail.com or visit her website at pasttensega.com.

Some proposed additions to the list of fall festivals

Riding through the outskirts of Ellijay, I was treated to a sight that was right in the wheelhouse of my offbeat sense of humor. Right there off the side of the road, some little scamps were having a fullscale battle. Instead of rocks, these kids were pelting one another with apples.

You can bet a few of them had swift parental justice meted out on their keesters.

Please note that as a 30-year-old, I filled out a reply card for Raleigh Hills, a facility that advertised success in getting folks off the booze.

Now many think there is little humor of being around someone who is all-pro when it comes to imbibing. I had the misfortune of having a dad and a stepdad who should be enshrined in drunkard hall of fame if there ever is one.

Both are deceased and it’s because of them, I have always had a defense/ coping mechanism that inspired me to “poke the bear,” only instead of a bear, it was great sport to poke the boozer.

My late brother Marty laughed un -

til he cried when Raleigh Hills called one morning, with a special offer of lifetime sobriety for Otis Campbell. Marty handed the phone to stepdad BJ, who we called Otis, both because of his portly frame and affinity for Beefeater’s gin. To our knowledge, he never wore a white suit and locked himself in a jail cell. One of Kern County’s finest did that for him after a night of revelry.

With Marty prone on the floor and Mom making a rasher of bacon and eggs, BJ unleashed an all-star litany of profanities at the trying-to-be helpful telemarketer.

After slamming down the receiver with gusto, Mom asked: “Who was that BJ?”

“Oh, Raleigh Hills asking for Otis Campbell. Mike’s 30 years old. Ain’t he ever going to grow up?”

A well thought-out prank, like kids throwing bombs at one another on the edge of an apple orchard, is as funny as it gets without anyone getting stitches or incarcerated.

With too much time on my hands and festival season reaching a crescendo, I pondered whether there would be money to be made by putting on these festivals:

•A yard-raking festival where participants come rake all those leaves

that are about to descend upon us. I’ll get Ace Hardware to sponsor with booths offering a cornucopia of rakes and work gloves. There should even be a sufficient supply of apples on hand for the kids who get bored with raking. I wouldn’t want them acting like one of King Arthur’s knights, jousting with rakes instead of lances.

• A corn maze open after dark with no lights and exclusively for the directionally challenged. Make sure to bring a thermal blanket. You’re going to be here awhile.

• A gourd-throwing workshop: Perfect for when I run out of apples. It’s a great opportunity for the youngsters to tune up their arms for Spring baseball. Besides, it’s time to put those gourds to good use. All they ever do is sit there on the table, looking afflicted with a gargantuan case of acne.

• Football-watching festival: This will go on well into winter and is ongoing. Drop by the “Man Cave Athletic Club” for nachos, wings and plenty of cold beverages. The 85-inch Sony and Sonos surround sound will make you feel like you’re at the game. Except you won’t have to stand in line to use the bathroom. There will be an endless supply of food. And Febreze.

• Truist Park yodeling: After clinching their division, the Braves have

been awful, with wins seemingly as commonplace as leap year. I hope I’m wrong, but having seen this Fall fade too many times, I’m afraid the ballpark won’t be vibrant in October, just cavernous. In case the Braves’ season ends early, it wouldn’t hurt to listen to some Slim Whitman.

I wonder if anyone knows how to yodel “Take Me Out to The Ballgame?”

Mike Tasos has lived in Forsyth County for more than 30 years. He’s an American by birth and considers himself a Southerner by the grace of God. He can be reached at miketasos55@ gmail.com.

26 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody OPINION
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MIKE TASOS Columnist

Thinking about fall planting? Consider gardenias

When you think of fall planting, you might ask, “What is my favorite shrub?” Without hesitation, I would answer: gardenias, with hydrangeas as a close second. I love any plant that flowers, but why gardenias?

Gardenias have five traits many gardeners are looking for:

• They are evergreens, meaning they do not lose their leaves in the winter. This is a plus when the shrub can be seen from the road.

• They produce white, fragrant flowers.

• They come in three sizes.

• They are deer-resistant and suffer from few, if any diseases.

• Most varieties will grow in USDA hardiness zones 7-10. Caution: make sure you read the plant tag and purchase only plants that are cold hardy for zone 7.

When I was a child growing up in Pennsylvania, my dad would give my sister and me a corsage every Easter to wear with our new Easter outfit. My favorite corsage flower was always the gardenia because of its enticing smell. As a child, I assumed they came from some exotic foreign location since they did not grow in any Pennsylvania gardens. What a pleasant surprise when I moved to Georgia and found that I could plant them in my garden! Most gardenias thrive in planting zones 7-10b, but some species, are not as cold hardy, and are suggested for zones 8-11. Most of North Fulton County is in zone 7b, and the rest of Fulton County in zones 7b and 8a. A word of caution: Recently some horticulturalists based on global warming concerns and increasing seasonal temperatures, have identified North Fulton County as zone 8a. The reason I add caution to this change in the planting zone of our area to zone 8 is our unpredictable winters.

Last winter and spring are a good example. The winter was exceptionally mild, but do you remember December 23 and December 24, 2022? On December 23, the temperatures in North Fulton County reached a low of 8 degrees, and the following night a record low of 6 degrees! The combination of these two nights of extreme, cold weather took its toll on many of our favorite landscape shrubs, especially shrubs designated for planting zone 8!

Now fast forward to March 2023 — more bad weather news for Georgia

About the author

This week’s “Garden Buzz” guest columnist is Carole MacMullan, a master gardener and a Milton resident. She taught biology for 35 years in the Pittsburgh area. In 2012 after moving to Milton, Carole completed the Master Gardener training program and joined the North Fulton Master Gardeners and the Milton Garden Club. Carole uses her teaching skills to create a variety of presentations on gardening topics for the NFMG Lecture Series and Speakers Bureau. She also volunteers weekly at the Assistance League of Atlanta (ALA) thrift store and acts as chair of their Links to Education scholarship program. Her favorite hobbies are gardening, hiking, biking, and reading.

survive in planting zone 7, whereas some varieties of gardenias are less cold hardy and are suggested for zone 8-10. “Frostproof” gardenias grow up to 4-5 feet tall and 3-4 feet wide and are considered medium-sized gardenias. In addition, they have an eye appealing, 2–3-inch, double flower that blooms in May and early June with sporadic, recurring blooms throughout the summer and early Fall.

If you have a location for one of the tallest varieties of gardenia, I suggest Gardenia jasminoides “August Beauty.” At maturity, they will grow 4 to 6 feet tall and will draw your attention with their explosion of 3-inch, white, double-petalled flowers that bloom in May or early June.

Top left: Three different sizes of gardeniaradicans, ‘Frostproof’, and ‘August Beauty’

Top right: Gardenia jasminoides ‘August Moon’ with 3-inch, double-petaled flower

Bottom left: Double flower-Gardenia jasminoides radicans-2-inch, double flower

Bottom right: Photo 2-Gardenia flower-single petaled flower

gardeners and farmers. The beginning of March was glorious and many of the spring flowering, fruit and ornamental trees as well as bushes bloomed earlier than expected. Then the unexpected happened! Two nights of devasting, below-freezing weather. On March 20, 2023, the temperature dropped to 24 degrees! It is estimated that 95% of the Georgia peach crop was lost. In response, the federal government recognized the financial loss to Georgia farmers and declared a natural disaster in 18 Georgia counties!

Home gardeners soon determined a large number of azaleas, lorepetalum, hydrangeas, camellias and gardenias suffered the consequences of the combination of the December record lows and the March freeze. With the increased temperatures in March 2023, the dormant perennials and shrubs were enticed out of their winter sleep and they began to form new leaves. All of the fragile, new leaves died as well as many of the older leaves. All of my hydrangeas that had just begun to form their leaves suffered the consequences of the two nights of freezing March temperatures. Thankfully, my hostas were still in dormancy and new leaves had not yet formed. Many of my friends and fellow Master Gardeners lost some of their landscaping plants. My daughter planted two shrubs in her yard in October of 2022, and both died.

Learn more

• https://www.gardenia.net/plant/ gardenia

• http://www.southernliving.com/ garden/southern-gardening-gardenia

• Emily Jones, “Amid peach crisis, Georgia citrus farms pass winter test”, Atlanta Journal Constitution, August 26, 2023. Page A10.

• Walter Reeves, “Hardiness Zones - Which one are we in?” https:// www.walterreeves.com/landscaping/ hardiness-zones-which-one-are-wein/#:~:text=Georgia%20was

Personally, I am glad I followed the “wait and see “policy because I am happy to report most of the plants I declared dead in March miraculously recovered and started again to form new leaves and new growth by May.

Back to my favorite plants, gardenias. If you need to plant a new shrub and have a partially sunny location, gardenias might be the right choice. Begin by determining where you need to add or replace a shrub. Because gardenias come in three sizes, they can be used in a variety of locations.

The smallest variety, called Gardenia radicans, will grow no taller or wider than 3 to 4 feet. Radicans have a 2-inch, double, white flower that blooms throughout May and again in August and will fill your yard with a lovely fragrance.

Another variety that I highly suggest is Gardenia jasminoides “Frostproof.” This variety is the most cold-tolerant of the gardenias and will

Here is another suggestion that I discovered on a recent visit to a garden center, Gardenia hybrid “Leefiv”’ with the common name Diamond Spire. This newly introduced medium-height hybrid has a narrow upright form which is desirable in many locations. It will grow at maturity to 3 to 4 feet tall and a compact 3 feet wide, grows in zone 7-10 and is a rebloomer. Its single, white flowers bloom in May, take a break and bloom again in August and early September.

Although the plant tags indicate that gardenias will grow in sun in Georgia, they prefer partial sun. Avoid full sun because they will suffer in the long, hot summer months and their leaves will show signs of stress and lose their lustrous, green color. Shady locations are also to be avoided since they will not flower and possibly die. For maximum growth, make sure you test the pH of the soil before you plant a gardenia. Gardenias as well as azaleas, rhododendrons and camellias prefer acidic soil, with a pH between 5 and 6. I would also suggest fertilizing gardenias with an acidic fertilizer in the spring after the blossoms die and the spring blooming season is complete.

Happy Fall planting!

North Fulton Master Gardeners, Inc. is a Georgia nonprofit 501(c) (3) organization whose purpose is to educate its members and the public in the areas of horticulture and ecology in order to promote and foster community enrichment. Master Gardener Volunteers are trained and certified by The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension. Learn more at nfmg.net. Previous Garden Buzz columns are featured at https://appenmedia.com/ opinion/columnists/garden_buzz/.

AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | September 28, 2023 | 27 OPINION GARDEN BUZZ
CAROLE MACMULLAN Guest Columnist PHOTOS BY CAROLE MACMULLAN/PROVIDED

PRESERVING THE PAST

The Lebanon community, a wee bit of lost history

and Houze Road. The first log cabin church and cemetery were built the following year on Houze Road. Circa 1840, the church built a clapboard sanctuary at the Ga. 9/Holcomb Bridge junction. In 1994, the city paid $1.8 million for the church property when the congregation was making plans to move to a new location on Crabapple Road.

MEYERS

Trying to research the history of the Lebanon community in North Fulton is a little like trying to research Glocca Morra, the mystical Irish village hidden from view in the Finian’s Rainbow 1947 Broadway play and 1968 movie. We know that the Lebanon we are discussing today was real, but it left few traces of its existence. It is known that it was an important commercial community in the early 1800s centered around Vickery Creek (today’s Big Creek) on today’s Holcomb Bridge Road in Roswell and that early settlers depended on Lebanon for goods and services. We also know that Lebanon was at some point absorbed into Roswell most likely circa 1932 when Milton County and Roswell merged into Fulton County.

First, a little history. In 1828, gold was discovered in Dahlonega which attracted settlers, prospectors and merchants to the area. In the gold lottery which began in October 1832 and ended in May 1833, the State of Georgia distributed lands to eligible white residents. In December 1832, the huge Cherokee County was divided into 10 smaller counties. One of them was Cobb County which included Roswell, Lebanon and the surrounding area. These developments interested pioneers such as businessman Roswell King. In May 1838, he bought land to establish a textile mill that was incorporated in 1839 as the Roswell Manufacturing Company. The company was very successful. He offered home sites and investment opportunities to his friends and associates from coastal Georgia. King and his friends constructed impressive homes for themselves, cottages and apartments for mill workers, and a school for children.

The city of Roswell’s growth has been well documented over the years, but not nearly as much is known about Lebanon, even though it was a thriving crossroads community that predated Roswell and was quite large. It extended roughly from where Big Creek goes under Holcomb Bridge Road near Ga. 400 to Ga. 9 and then north for more than a mile.

The centerpiece of the community was a general store operated by brothers Clark Howell (1811-1882) and Archibald Howell (1814-1903). The store provided credit to some 300 families in the Roswell area including Roswell King. Lebanon was selected for

a U.S. Post Office in 1833, a few months after Alpharetta’s post office was opened and before Roswell obtained its post office.

In 1858 the Lebanon postal designation was changed to Alpharetta after the area became Milton County the previous year, perhaps a sign that Alpharetta and Roswell would become the dominant communities.

Near the Lebanon post office was a cotton gin owned by Robert Thompson, great-great grandfather of Aubrey Morris, celebrated reporter for many years with the Atlanta Journal and WSB radio who was born in Lebanon.

Lebanon also boasted a grist mill, sawmill, tannery and blacksmith shop. A bridge at Big Creek burned down in 1909, according to Linda Mansell Martin whose book, “The Great Generation of Mansell’s of North Georgia,” chronicles the history of the family.

There was also a great deal of activity at the other end of the Lebanon community where today’s Ga. 9 and Holcomb Bridge Road intersect. At the corner, perched on a hill was the Lebanon Baptist Church. The church was organized in 1836 by Amariah Hembree who lived near Hembree Road

In 1998, a controversy arose about the church property’s future, which by then was in the center of a thriving commercial district. A citizens group wanted to refurbish the church to create “an oasis of beauty” in the midst of commercial development. Aubrey Morris was quoted in the Atlanta Constitution as saying “It’s absolutely essential to save this church and establish it as an historic park…It is the bedrock of Roswell history. It would be sad if dollars carry more weight than history.”

The city maintained that the land was too valuable and sold the property, illustrating the age-old struggle between historic preservation and economic development. In 1996, the church purchased 28 acres on Crabapple Road which is its current home.

Ga. 9 north of Holcomb Bridge Road developed into significant farms and related businesses largely thanks to Robert Henry Mansell (1873-1950) who owned a 700-acre farm between the Holcomb Bridge/Ga. 9 intersection and Houze Road. Around 1948, Robert and his wife Maude Dorris Mansell (1883-1977) divided the land among their children who operated farms and various businesses along Ga. 9, including Sun Valley Beach Park founded by Joe Mansell (1906-1997). The Mansell Brothers Feeds store was operated by brothers Walton (19121990)-and CB (1916-2004) Mansell at Ga. 9 and Houze Road. They also owned Egg Acres across the street. Linda M. Martin notes that Robert H. Mansell, his son-in-law Jason Henry Matthews (1894-1983) and brother James Howell Mansell (1877-1970) owned the Lebanon Cotton Gin and Lumber Company at the “Lebanon Curve” where Houze Road joins H-9.

Online references to these businesses and farms frequently identified them as being in Lebanon even in the 1950s and 1960s.

Like the fabled Glocca Morra, Lebanon does not exist anymore, or does it?

Bob is director emeritus of the Milton Historical Society and a Member of the City of Alpharetta Historic Preservation Commission. You can email him at bobmey@bellsouth.net.

28 | September 28, 2023 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody OPINION
BOB
Columnist
PHOTOS BY MANSELL FAMILY/PROVIDED The Mansell brothers, from left, Joe, Earl, Walton and CB at the funeral of their father Robert Henry Mansell in May 1950. Joe, Walon, and CB operated businesses along Ga. 9 in the Lebanon community, now Roswell. Earl preferred to be a farmer. The Mansell Brothers Feeds store and mill on Ga. 9 and Houze Road in the Lebanon community was operated by Walton and CB Mansell who also owned Eggs Acres across the street which operated for many years. This picture was taken in the 1950s when the area was still called Lebanon even though it was in the city of Roswell.

THE CITY OF DUNWOODY, GEORGIA NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

The City of Dunwoody Zoning Board of Appeals will meet on Thursday, November 2, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. in the Council of Chambers of Dunwoody City Hall, located at 4800 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Dunwoody, Georgia 30338, for the purpose of due process of the following:

ZBA 23-17, 4459 Village Springs Run: Variance from Chapter 16, Section 78 to allow a fireplace to encroach into the 75-foot stream buffer.

Should you have any questions or comments, or would like to view the application and supporting materials, please contact the City of Dunwoody Community Development Department at 678-382-6800. Members of the public are encouraged to call or schedule a meeting with the staff in advance of the Public Hearing if they have questions or are unfamiliar with the process. The staff is available to answer questions, discuss the decision-making process, and receive comments and concerns.

In Memoriam

Michael Rae Will

January 22, 1944 - September 19, 2023

Michael “Mick” Will passed away peacefully at the age of 79 on Tuesday September 19, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mick was born on January 22, 1944 in Corwith, Iowa to Fred and Vera (Wagner) Will. He grew up on the family farm with his older brother Roger and twin sister Mary. Mick thrived playing baseball and basketball, and his Corwith-Wesley High team won the school’s first state baseball championship in 1958. He attended Wartburg College, in Waverly, Iowa where he met his beloved bride Barbara “Barb” Ruprich to whom he was happily married for 57 years.

Shortly after graduation from Wartburg, Mick began a 38year career at Tennant Company, where he excelled as a sales executive serving the industrial and commercial sector. He enjoyed his years at Tennant and cherished the friendships with colleagues that were forged on the many sales leadership trips he earned as a top producer at the company. He always proudly showed people the Tennant sweepers whenever he saw them. While he traveled extensively, he took pride in his children’s many sports accomplishments and could always be seen in the stands rooting them on. Mick retired from Tennant in 2004 at 61 years old after roles in Madison, WI, Orlando, FL, St. Louis, MO, and Atlanta, GA.

After retiring, Mick fully embraced the second phase of his life. He and Barb traveled extensively to spend time with family and friends, and they always made time for a

DEATH NOTICES

George Brink, 70, of Roswell, passed away on September 10, 2023. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors & Crematory.

Michelle Campbell, 51, of Alpharetta, passed away on September 17, 2023. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors & Crematory.

trip to a casino when possible. Mick could often be found watching the stock ticker or NASCAR races on TV or working through his daily phone call list. Mick never missed a game with his many grandchildren and would bring his smile and big personality to the sports venues in Atlanta and Birmingham. He enjoyed eating meals with friends and having people over to sit long hours on his patio at home. You could also always count on Mick to engage with strangers everywhere he went. After each meal, he would have the personal story of the wait staff.

Mick is survived by his loving wife Barb, his twin sister Mary Aagard (Steve), his sistersin-law Karen McCarthy and Connie Will, his children Chad (LeeAnne), Jodie (Brian), and Amy, and his grandchildren Parker, Alexander, Kensington, Brooke, Mason, Thomson, and John “JD” Duncan.

Mick was preceded in death by his parents, parents-in-law, his brother Roger Will, his brother-in-law Jack McCarthy, and his son-in-law Hardy Brumfield.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests those who wish to express sympathy to consider making a donation to their favorite charity.

A Memorial Service will be held on Saturday, October 14, 2023, 4PM, at Saint Luke’s Presbyterian Church, 1978 Mount Vernon Road, Atlanta, Georgia, 30338. A Celebration of Mick’s Life will follow from 5PM - 8PM at AC Hotel Atlanta Perimeter 40 Perimeter Center Place Dunwoody, Georgia 30346.

Albert Cunningham, 68, of Roswell, passed away on September 13, 2023. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors & Crematory.

James Dwiggins, 88, of Roswell, passed away on September 16, 2023. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors & Crematory.

Burton Hammond, 94, of Alpharetta, passed away on September 8, 2023. Arrangements by Northside Chapel Funeral Directors & Crematory.

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